Former heavyweight boxing champion Deontay Wilder alleged in a television interview that the mother of one of his daughters conceived the child without his consent by using his semen after an intimate encounter.
Wilder, 40, made the claim during an appearance on “Piers Morgan Uncensored.” He said the woman collected his ejaculate from her stomach, took it into a bathroom and inseminated herself. He said she became pregnant with their daughter two weeks later.
“Her mother tried to set me up to have the baby,” Wilder said in the interview, according to a video clip circulating widely on social media. “She injected my sperm in her and ran into the bathroom and locked the door and that’s how we had her. She don’t even know I knew this, but I’m telling it to the world.”
Wilder described the encounter in detail. He said it was his habit after sex to ejaculate on the woman’s stomach and then wipe it off with a towel he kept by the bed. On this occasion, he said, when he reached for the towel she struck his hand forcefully and screamed “No” before running to the bathroom.
Deontay Wilder tells Piers Morgan an insane story about how his baby mama became pregnant with their daughter.
“Her mother tried to set me up to have the baby. She injected my sp—m in her and ran to the bathroom and locked the door and that’s how we had her, she don’t even know… pic.twitter.com/2z9pFEeMzF
— FearBuck (@FearedBuck) April 1, 2026
“I did what I do, had a good nut and I nut on her stomach,” Wilder said. “This time I went and got the towel to try to wipe it off but she hit my hand so hard I thought she hit my hand like a home run, like a baseball player do a baseball bat. But she screamed ‘No’ as if she was being raped. She got up so quickly and ran into the bathroom and locked the door. Two weeks later she was pregnant with my daughter.”
He added that he learned the full story later by reading the woman’s private journal without her knowledge. Wilder also described the woman as promiscuous and said most of her relationships lasted only about two months.
Wilder did not name the mother or specify which of his children — he has several with different partners — was conceived in the manner he described. .
Validity breakdown if taken at face value
Assuming Wilder’s account is accurate and the woman did exactly as he described — immediately collecting fresh semen from her stomach after external ejaculation and inserting it vaginally herself — a resulting pregnancy is biologically plausible, though far from guaranteed.
Sperm ejaculated onto skin begins to lose viability quickly because of exposure to air, temperature changes and skin enzymes. However, if the transfer happened within seconds or a minute, enough motile sperm could survive brief handling and reach the vagina or cervix to fertilize an egg if the woman was ovulating. At-home intracervical insemination (ICI) using fresh partner semen has documented success rates of roughly 10-20% per cycle in fertility studies, comparable to natural conception under ideal conditions.
The “two weeks later she was pregnant” timeline fits standard early pregnancy detection. Conception can occur within hours of insemination, and sensitive home pregnancy tests or blood work can detect the hCG hormone as early as 10-14 days afterward — right around the time many women notice a missed period. Nothing in the described sequence violates basic reproductive biology.
That said, the method Wilder described would be a crude, low-efficiency form of self-insemination. Success would still depend on precise ovulation timing, sperm quality, and the woman’s fertility. Statistically, most single attempts at such a DIY procedure do not result in pregnancy. If it happened exactly as recounted, the couple simply beat the odds on that particular occasion.
Legally and ethically, the alleged actions would raise serious questions of consent regarding the use of his genetic material. But from a narrow medical standpoint, the pregnancy timeline and mechanism he outlined are consistent with how human reproduction works.
